October 2005

As far back as January this year, we were discussing a company called Natalco Airlines, registered in Sao Tome & Principe but really located almost anywhere else. Back then, it was possible for a source to put the Sao Tome CAA on the right track regarding an aeroplane, An-12 S9-BAN, serial no. 402111, that had…

Read More Natalco: Slight Return, and Bulgarian issues

Since the first reports of a Viktor Bout-related airline in Iraq, in the spring of 2004, there have been mentions of something called “Royal Air Cargo”, “Royal Airlines”, or some other combinations of those names. I knew from early on that Royal Air Cargo existed in Pakistan, where it resold the services of British Gulf…

Read More Royal Airlines

Everyone’s getting het up about the prospect of the current residual US responsibilities for the Internet infrastructure and the possibility that the forthcoming World Summit for the Information Society might give them to the UN, or more specifically the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), the UN tech body that makes sure North Korean and Japanese phone…

Read More ICANN If You Can

Well, the grey men have spoken and Angela Merkel has, to my considerable surprise, ended up as Germany’s chancellor. It seems that the easy-life temptations of a grand coalition overcame the SPD’s desire to hang on to the chancellor’s office, and motivated them to give Schröder the push. This leaves Germany with a truly bizarre…

Read More Attack of the Fiendish Müntemerkel

One thing that strikes everyone, I think, who visits Singapore is the apparent racial harmony. Here is (to British eyes) an example of a multicultural society functioning perfectly, people expressing their religious and national peculiarities within the scope of a shared identity in a sense indistinguishable from that expression itself. Or, to more integration-minded visitors,…

Read More Singapore Blogging: Multiculturalism, Authority and Identity

A new research paper from Caltech, which you can read here, has cast doubt on the characterisation of the Internet as a scale-free network. What the fuck is one of them things, and why care? Almost anyone who knows anything beyond “there’s this thing called the interwebs, it’s like TV that you read” knows that…

Read More Scale-free networks: the internet in’t

1) The Kurd who’s been made President – really as a side payment for not declaring independence – just said he wants the Shia prime minister to quit, the same week as it turns out they’ve cut a deal to get out their oil without everyone else. 2) The Shia just (as good as unilaterally)…

Read More Indicators